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Firms have until May 15 to apply for 8th round of Genius NY
SYRACUSE — Tech startups focused on uncrewed aerial systems, automation, artificial intelligence (A.I.), and advanced air mobility (AAM) have until the middle of May to apply for this year’s Genius NY competition. Genius NY — which the state describes as the world’s largest business-accelerator focused on uncrewed aerial systems — is now accepting applications for […]
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SYRACUSE — Tech startups focused on uncrewed aerial systems, automation, artificial intelligence (A.I.), and advanced air mobility (AAM) have until the middle of May to apply for this year’s Genius NY competition.
Genius NY — which the state describes as the world’s largest business-accelerator focused on uncrewed aerial systems — is now accepting applications for the 8th round of the year-long program.
The in-residence accelerator is operated by CenterState CEO at the Tech Garden in downtown Syracuse. It will invest more than $3 million in five finalist companies, including a $1 million grand prize, Empire State Development (ESD) said in a Feb. 8 news release.
Genius NY stands for Growing ENtrepreneurs & Innovators in UpState New York.
The program will accept applications through May 15 at www.geniusny.com.
Subsets may include precision and remote sensing, smart-city applications, data collection and analytics, guidance or communication systems, and sensors, among other technological categories.
The program also offers business resources, programming, mentorship and networking opportunities to assist innovative startups with the tools they need to take advantage of emerging opportunities, ESD said.
Genius NY participants are required to operate their business in Central New York for at least one year.
The program is funded through the CNY Rising Upstate Revitalization Initiative (URI), the region’s strategic plan to generate economic growth and community development.
“We’re looking for startups interested in pushing the bounds of current UAS technologies in Central New York.” Kara Jones, director of Genius NY, said in the ESD release. “The region’s growing innovation ecosystem offers early-stage companies a unique opportunity to work collaboratively with industry leaders while advancing their own technologies. The targeted resources awarded to Genius NY companies enable them to scale faster, generate revenue sooner, and create jobs for the local economy.”
A panel of judges will evaluate the applications, and the program will select semifinalists to present demos and pitches this summer, ESD said.
Five companies will advance to participate in the program, which is structured as a “unique programmed incubator and accelerator experience,” the release stated.
The selected teams will enter the in-person accelerator at CenterState CEO’s The Tech Garden later this summer, where they will be immersed in the incubator’s events, resource pool, and mentoring. Applicants should be prepared to relocate to Central New York to participate in the program starting in August.
“The GENIUS NY accelerator is fueling New York State’s thriving uncrewed aerial systems industry,” Hope Knight, president, CEO, & commissioner of Empire State Development, said. “This renowned program is attracting forward-thinking innovators from around the world to Central New York and ensuring that their pioneering ideas take flight thanks to the area’s unmatched UAS assets and infrastructure.”
To date, the program has attracted more than 37 startups to Central New York since its inception in 2017. To date, the accelerator has invested nearly
$21 million in the innovative teams, which have gone on to raise more than $100 million in venture capital.
New Upstate Family Health Center CEO outlines goals
ROME — Upstate Family Health Center, Inc.’s new CEO brings more than just years of experience in the health-care industry to the role. She also carries a desire to help those in need and hopes to grow the organization to help even more people. Andreea Mera on Nov. 6 started in her new leadership role
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ROME — Upstate Family Health Center, Inc.’s new CEO brings more than just years of experience in the health-care industry to the role. She also carries a desire to help those in need and hopes to grow the organization to help even more people.
Andreea Mera on Nov. 6 started in her new leadership role at Upstate Family Health Center, a licensed health-care center offering family health-care services to individuals of all ages at locations in the Mohawk Valley.
“It’s been quite an experience,” Mera says of the job, which has been full of both the expected and the unexpected.
There are two things that have really struck Mera about upstate. First is the diversity of the population the health-care organization serves, which includes about 80 percent of the refugee population in the greater Utica area.
The other standout is the staff.
“I think the one thing that makes us stand out is … most of the people who work here work here because they want to,” she says. Many of the employees have had their own experiences that, in turn, make them very empathetic when interacting with the people Upstate serves.
Her hope is that level of empathetic care will help attract new patients to Upstate Family Health, which operates clinics in Rome, Utica, and in six school-based clinics.
To help drive that increase, Mera says she’s focused on finding creative ways to provide people the care they need when they need it.
“I want to be the place where patients come to because they want to, not because they have to,” she says.
The majority of Upstate Family Health Center’s patient population is on Medicaid. It provides a sliding fee for co-payments to ensure that people can receive care, which includes primary care, occupational therapy, mental/behavioral health services, and substance-abuse care. The health-care provider also operates a mobile integrated health vehicle to visit patients in their homes and a Hepatitis C program that delivered a cure to 50 patients last year.
Mera doesn’t originally come from a health-care background. She came to the United States from Romania 25 years ago and remembers well the uncertainty that came with having no health-insurance coverage and no money to pay for it.
While Mera originally went to school for criminal justice with thoughts of becoming a lawyer, she started working in the New York City public hospital system in 2012. While pursuing her MBA in health-care administration, she held various leadership roles within the organization. Mera also pursued a master’s degree in pharmacy policy and regulation — all with the goal of obtaining a comprehensive understanding of all the major players in the health-care system and leveraging that knowledge to help patients further.
She had a desire to work in a hospital setting so she could take all that she learned on the administrative side and put her “boots on the ground” where she could make a real difference.
Mera became familiar with the Utica–Rome area through her love of fly fishing and ended up buying a house near Syracuse before landing with Upstate Family Health Center.
The organization appealed to her because, “the mission is the [one] I’ve worked for and I’ve worked toward for my entire career,” Mera explains. The mission is simply to build a healthy community through empowering and partnering with patients.
“This organization has tremendous potential,” she says of Upstate Family Health Center. “We are looking to transform and provide the best care we can, and that’s where we’re going.”
Black River Systems wins $12M U.S. Air Force contract modification
UTICA — Black River Systems Company Inc. was recently awarded a nearly $12 million cost-plus-fixed-fee completion engineering change proposal modification to a previously awarded U.S. Air Force contract for Cognitive Algorithms for Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) Contested and Degraded Environments software and hardware. The contract adjustment is to expand signal-processing libraries to include updated signal of
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UTICA — Black River Systems Company Inc. was recently awarded a nearly $12 million cost-plus-fixed-fee completion engineering change proposal modification to a previously awarded U.S. Air Force contract for Cognitive Algorithms for Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) Contested and Degraded Environments software and hardware.
The contract adjustment is to expand signal-processing libraries to include updated signal of interest for 5G and to integrate developed forward processing capabilities into enterprise-compatible open-architecture systems, according to a Feb. 6 contract announcement from the U.S. Department of Defense. This enables asynchronous operations, developing scalable SIGINT architectures for cognitive radio and machine learning, and researching, developing, implementing, and testing hardware architectures that have agility to be integrated on the current platform but are also applicable to future platform development.
The modification brings the total value of the contract to almost $23.97 million.
Work takes place at Black River Systems’ Utica office and is expected to be completed by Oct. 3, 2026.
Fiscal 2024 research, development, test, and evaluation funds of $100,000 and fiscal 2024 operational system development funds of nearly $1.43 million are being obligated at the time of award, per the contract announcement. The Air Force Research Laboratory in Rome is the contracting authority.
Black River Systems designs, develops, deploys, and analyzes radar, infrared, acoustic, and electronic-warfare sensing systems for the Department of Defense and prime contractors. The company, headquartered at 162 Genesee St. in Utica, also has an office in Syracuse, as well as locations in Ohio, Minnesota, and California.
Syracuse aiport posts record passenger numbers
Also plans two new eateries SYRACUSE — Syracuse Hancock International Airport (SYR) had the “busiest year in the airport’s history” in 2023 with nearly 3 million air travelers passing through the facility. The 2.86 million passenger figure at SYR surpasses 2019 traffic levels, which produced a 30-year record for the airport, by 11 percent. The
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SYRACUSE — Syracuse Hancock International Airport (SYR) had the “busiest year in the airport’s history” in 2023 with nearly 3 million air travelers passing through the facility.
The 2.86 million passenger figure at SYR surpasses 2019 traffic levels, which produced a 30-year record for the airport, by 11 percent.
The Syracuse Regional Airport Authority (SRAA) on Feb. 2 announced the data in its annual report, which it discussed during its State of the Airport event.
That same day, SRAA and Gideon Toal Management Services (GTMS) also announced plans for two new eateries at the airport.
The number of people flying is “surging” at airports across the U.S., but data from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) indicates SYR is one of the “fastest growing” airports in the nation, SRAA said.
“Multiple” factors have contributed to this 11 percent growth at SYR, which is more than double the national average for commercial airports. Hub routes previously served by smaller, regional aircraft (50 to 70 seats) are now served by larger, mainline aircraft (about 109 to 240 seats).
Additionally, the airport continues announcing new routes and “increased frequencies” on existing flights. Another significant growth factor is the changing makeup of the airport’s catchment area, which is described as the geographic area from which SYR draws passengers.
Emerging from the pandemic, airlines began to question the economic viability of running smaller, regional aircraft to surrounding, smaller regional airports such as Watertown, Ithaca, Elmira, and Binghamton, the SRAA said. The Syracuse airport’s airline partners are instead choosing to funnel this demand from surrounding communities through SYR by running more frequent, larger mainline aircraft, the authority explained. The reduction in traffic observed at the nearby, smaller regional airports is a “direct correlation” with the “dramatic uptick” in passengers at SYR.
“We are uniquely aware of and sensitive to the changing traffic patterns within our catchment area,” Jason Terreri, SRAA executive director, said in a release. “Planning for the future is now done through the lens of regional responsibility, ensuring our team and facilities can meet the demand of the entire population residing within the Central New York service area.”
Gideon Toal Management Services (GTMS) is a U.S. Department of Transportation-certified Airport Concessions Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (ACDBE) that currently operates the Escape Lounge at SYR.
The SRAA and GTMS have finalized an agreement for GTMS to open and operate a Qdoba Mexican Eats and Einstein Bros Bagels at SYR.
Qdoba will operate in the post-security checkpoint hallway leading to concourse A gates, near the Escape Lounge. Additionally, Einstein Bros. Bagels will occupy a newly planned extension at the end of concourse B.
The project was secured through a successful bid last fall, SRAA said. The addition to the airport’s concessions is made possible, in part, by the $20 million grant awarded to SYR in September through the Upstate Airport Economic Development and Revitalization Competition, it added.
Both restaurants are anticipated to begin operations at different points throughout 2024.
The quick-serve nature of each will help the airport “meet the demand” for more grab-and-go options, especially during peak travel hours, SRAA said.
The Syracuse airport draws most of its traffic in three distinct “banks” — or clusters of outgoing flights — most days from 4-6 a.m.; 10 a.m.-12 p.m.; and 4-6 p.m., per the authority.
CenterState CEO, KeyBank seek to boost BIPOC, women, and veteran-owned businesses
The goal is to produce generational wealth SYRACUSE — CenterState CEO says it plans to expand business coaching and technical-assistance programs for Black, Indigenous and other People of Color (BIPOC), women, and veteran-owned firms in Central New York. The organization will use a $500,000 donation from KeyBank (NYSE: KEY) to do so. The grant is
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SYRACUSE — CenterState CEO says it plans to expand business coaching and technical-assistance programs for Black, Indigenous and other People of Color (BIPOC), women, and veteran-owned firms in Central New York.
The organization will use a $500,000 donation from KeyBank (NYSE: KEY) to do so.
The grant is part of KeyBank’s commitment to invest $40 billion in the communities it serves and support diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, CenterState CEO said in its Feb. 6 announcement.
KeyBank made its donation to the CenterState CEO Foundation, which works to “attract philanthropic support for CenterState CEO programs that remove barriers to economic prosperity for people and places,” per the announcement.
“This unique approach to equitable growth by CenterState CEO will help entrepreneurs from all backgrounds have access to assistance and financing they need that will help our region grow,” Stephen Fournier, KeyBank’s Central New York market president, said in a news release. “We are proud to invest in their efforts that will make it possible for marginalized entrepreneurs to build successful futures and generational wealth.”
This funding will also play a key role in helping CenterState CEO scale efforts to expand access to business financing for “under-capitalized founders,” for whom traditional business loans and investments are “often challenging,” the organization contends.
It will support the launch and growth of underrepresented and BIPOC firms through training, coaching, and technical assistance under CenterState CEO’s Up Start program and other small-business development programming. That programming includes a real-estate developer-in-residence pilot.
The funding will also provide direct lending to — and investment in — undercapitalized firms via CenterState CEO’s Growth + Equity Fund.
“Systemic barriers have often left the talent of many entrepreneurs in our community untapped and their potential under supported,” Dominic Robinson, senior VP of inclusive growth at CenterState CEO, said in the release. “This investment from KeyBank will support important tools like the Growth + Equity Fund and Up Start that address these equity gaps and scale their economic impact on entrepreneurs from historically disinvested populations and neighborhoods.”
The CenterState CEO announcement went on to say, “Ultimately, as participants in these programs build successful businesses, they will achieve financial sustainability and begin to build generational wealth. As drivers of the local economy, they will gain stronger voices in local leadership, participate in the regeneration of the built environment, and drive economic growth and revitalization in these neighborhoods.”
“Building generational wealth is key to building strong neighborhoods and strong economies,” Tamika Otis, corporate responsibility officer for KeyBank in Central New York, said in the release. “This investment by Key will kelp CenterState CEO continue the important work they are doing to level the playing field and make our community more accessible, equitable and successful.”
Since 2017, KeyBank has followed through on community commitments totaling more than $599 million in Central New York, supporting affordable housing and community development projects; small business and home lending to low-to-moderate income individuals and communities; and transformative philanthropy, per the release.
McClearn named director of pension fund’s Emerging Manager Program
Interim tag removed ALBANY — New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli on Feb. 7 announced the appointment of Sylvester (Sly) McClearn as director of the New York State Common Retirement Fund’s Emerging Manager Program. McClearn had been appointed interim director of the program back in February 2023. The pension fund’s Emerging Manager Program invests with
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ALBANY — New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli on Feb. 7 announced the appointment of Sylvester (Sly) McClearn as director of the New York State Common Retirement Fund’s Emerging Manager Program.
McClearn had been appointed interim director of the program back in February 2023.
The pension fund’s Emerging Manager Program invests with emerging managers directly — or with the assistance of other managers or program partners — in separately managed accounts or commingled funds. Program partners assist in the timely deployment of capital, perform due diligence, and recommend managers to participate in the program.
Each year, the fund also seeks to graduate emerging managers to be direct investments by the fund. More than 18 emerging managers have graduated from the program, DiNapoli’s office said.
“Sylvester McClearn has a long and proven track record in the financial industry and as a member of our team,” DiNapoli said in a news release. “Mr. McClearn has the experience and the skill set needed to continue attracting innovative investment perspectives that earn solid returns, while addressing the historical inequities in the finance sector. I am confident he will help expand our successful Emerging Manager Program and uphold its role as a pathway to growth for smaller and diverse investment managers.”
The fund holds an annual emerging manager & MWBE (minority- and women-owned business entities) conference to give investment professionals the opportunity to gain a better understanding of the fund’s investment process and manager selection. This year’s conference was scheduled for Feb. 16 in Albany, per the DiNapoli release.
Prior to becoming the program’s interim director, McClearn joined DiNapoli’s office as a senior investment officer for the Emerging Manager Program in 2020. With the Common Retirement Fund, he works closely with its internal investment staff, asset class program partners, and affiliate organizations on all aspects of the Emerging Manager Program.
With more than two decades of Wall Street experience, McClearn has also held various leadership positions at CastleOak Securities, Loop Capital Markets, Topeka Capital Markets, and Citi Institutional Client Group. Throughout his career, he has built “strategic institutional relationships that improved brand recognition and enhanced returns for the largest and most sophisticated asset managers,” DiNapoli’s office contended.
McClearn has an MBA and bachelor’s degree from Fordham University, where he also serves as a Fordham trustee fellow.
KeyCorp to pay Q1 dividend in mid-March
Will hold annual meeting on May 9 KeyCorp (NYSE: KEY) — parent company of KeyBank, the No. 2 bank ranked by deposit market share in the 16-county Central New York region — has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 20.5 cents per share of its common stock for the first quarter of the year. The
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KeyCorp (NYSE: KEY) — parent company of KeyBank, the No. 2 bank ranked by deposit market share in the 16-county Central New York region — has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 20.5 cents per share of its common stock for the first quarter of the year.
The dividend is payable on March 15 to holders of record as of the close of business on Feb. 27. At Key’s current stock price, the dividend yields about 6 percent on an annual basis.
KeyCorp also announced that it will hold its 2024 annual meeting of shareholders on Thursday, May 9.
Headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, Key is one of the nation’s largest bank-based financial-services companies, with assets of about $188 billion as of Dec. 31. Its roots trace back nearly 200 years to Albany. KeyBank has a network of more than 950 branches and over 1,200 ATMs in 15 states.
EBRI study: student-loan debt hampers 401(k) participation
Making student-loan debt payments was found to have a “negative impact” on both the average 401(k) employee-contribution rate and account balance, according to a new research report published Feb. 8 by the Washington, D.C.–based Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) and J.P. Morgan Asset Management. The report, “Student Loans and Retirement Preparedness,” provides information on how
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Making student-loan debt payments was found to have a “negative impact” on both the average 401(k) employee-contribution rate and account balance, according to a new research report published Feb. 8 by the Washington, D.C.–based Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) and J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
The report, “Student Loans and Retirement Preparedness,” provides information on how student-loan debt payments affect 401(k) contributions of those who are contributing and whether participants increase or decrease their contributions when the status of their student-loan payments changes, or when payments end or start.
Provisions in the legislation SECURE 2.0 allow for many potential changes to 401(k) plans and financial-wellbeing programs, including matching contributions to 401(k) plans from student-loan debt payments. However, many benefit changes can result in “additional expenses,” and in some cases, these additional expenses might not result in the “impact that was expected,” EBRI said in its news release about the report.
As a result, the researchers reviewed 401(k) plan recordkeeper data on balances and contributions of active participants linked with banking data from these same participants to see if they are making student-loan payments.
Researchers examined a three-year period to determine if contribution changes resulted after stopping and starting payments. They were also looking to determine if student-loan payments were made in prior years instead of just a one-year snapshot, which could miss participants who were making payments in the year(s) prior to an analysis year, EBRI said.
The Employee Benefit Research Institute and J.P. Morgan Asset Management are conducting this study as part of an ongoing joint effort to deliver data-driven research to better understand how the financial factors faced by 401(k) plan participants outside of their 401(k) plan impact their retirement preparations.
Overall, the goal is to provide insights to help build a stronger retirement system by policymakers, plan sponsors and plan providers, the EBRI said.
The study found that among those with incomes less than $55,000, the average employee-contribution rate of those making a student-loan payment during the three-year period was 5.3 percent compared with 5.7 percent for those not making student-loan payments. The difference is larger among those with incomes of $55,000 or more: 6.1 percent contribution rate for those with payments versus 7.3 percent for those without payments.
When looking at the ending account balances by tenure, the average was lower for those who made student-loan debt payments than for those who did not make these payments. The differences are “particularly pronounced” among the participants with incomes of $55,000 or more. For example, among those with tenures of more than 5 years to 12 years, the average balance for those who made payments was $86,109 versus $107,687 for those who did not make payments.
Of the participants who were making student-loan debt payments at the beginning of the study period and had stopped before the end of the study, 31.6 percent increased their contribution rate by at least one-percentage point after the payments had stopped. The share that increased was slightly higher for those with incomes less than $55,000 at 33.3 percent compared with 30.5 percent for those with incomes of $55,000 or more.
Making student-loan debt payments was found to have a “statistically significant negative impact” on both the average employee-contribution rate and account balance at the end of the study when using regression analysis, EBRI noted.
“The paying of student loan payments had a significant impact on the level of contributions of those contributing,” Craig Copeland, director of wealth benefits research at EBRI, said in the news release. “However, some of the impact of the student loan payments appeared to be lessened by the design of the 401(k) plan such as automatic enrollment or employer contribution match levels as the median employee contribution rate for all participants studied was near the level of the maximum amount matched and/or common default rates in automatic enrollment plans.”
“Yet, many participants adjusted their contributions as their student loan debt obligations outside of the plan changed. Consequently, financial wellness programs can help in the contribution and debt payment decisions by considering the total finances of the participant,” Sharon Carson, retirement strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, said. “The payment status change can also be an important touch point in helping to improve the financial wellbeing of participants, as many appear to be making important financial decisions at this time and better information could improve outcomes.”
Single-customer households who were ages 65 or younger in 2017 from the Chase data were matched with participants from the EBRI/ICI 401(k) Plan Database. These single-customer household participants must have complete data in both datasets in each year from 2017-2019. The 401(k) data only included active participants.
The years of 2017-2019 were chosen since they are the most recent years before the suspension of student-loan payments during the COVID-19 pandemic, which is expected to be closer to environment going forward, EBRI said. This resulted in 51,567 single customer household participants for the study’s analysis.
Ask Rusty: If My Wife Claims Now, Will It Hurt My SS Amount?
Dear Rusty: I am 69 years old, and my wife turned 70 recently. I am still working full time. My wife is not working, but she received a letter from the Social Security Administration (SSA), saying she should take her Social Security (SS) benefits as soon as possible. My question is: since my wife has
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Dear Rusty: I am 69 years old, and my wife turned 70 recently. I am still working full time. My wife is not working, but she received a letter from the Social Security Administration (SSA), saying she should take her Social Security (SS) benefits as soon as possible. My question is: since my wife has reached her full retirement age, can she take her SS without it affecting mine when I claim? I plan to work at least another year, depending on how the economy goes (I may have to work longer if it doesn’t get better). I have IRAs and a 401(k) to pull from when I retire.
Signed: Anxious
Dear Anxious: The reason your wife received a letter from the SSA, suggesting she claims now, is because her benefit reached maximum some time ago at age 70. Thus, there is no reason for her to wait beyond age 70 to claim. By delaying past age 70 your wife is losing money, so she should apply as soon as possible. I suggest your wife call the SSA at (800) 772-1213 (or your local office) right away to request an appointment to apply for her benefits and she should be sure to request six months of retroactive payments (SSA will pay up to six months retroactively). If your wife has a “my Social Security” online account, she can also apply online at www.ssa.gov/apply, but she should be sure to request six months of retroactive benefits in the “Remarks” section of the online application. Because your wife is more than six months past age 70, getting 6 months retroactive benefits will not reduce her age 70 benefit amount. Nor will your wife claiming her benefits now negatively affect your Social Security when you later claim.
Even though you plan to continue working, likely beyond 70 years of age yourself, you should not wait beyond age 70 to claim for the same reason — your benefit will reach maximum when you are 70. You can apply for your benefits up to four months in advance, and specify you want benefits to start in the month you turn 70. If you haven’t already done so, you may wish to create your own “my Social Security” online account now at www.ssa.gov/myaccount, which will make it easier for you to apply online at www.ssa.gov/apply when the time comes next year. Applying online is, by far, the most efficient way, but you need to have your online account set up first to do so.
Just so you know, there is no need to worry that you won’t get credit for work income earned after you have applied for your benefits. Even after you are collecting benefits, the SSA will automatically review your earnings each year when that information is received from the IRS (after you file your income-tax return). If your most recent earnings are higher than those in any of the 35 years of lifetime earnings used to calculate your benefit when you claim, the Social Security Administration will automatically increase your monthly payment amount. In other words, you shouldn’t delay past age 70 to claim Social Security because you’re working — you’ll still get credit for those earnings, automatically.
So, I suggest that your wife take fast action to apply for her Social Security benefits to avoid losing any more money, and that you plan to apply for your benefits to start when you turn age 70. There is no financial advantage to waiting beyond age 70 to claim, even if you continue working.
Russell Gloor is a national Social Security advisor at the AMAC Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC). The 2.4-million-member AMAC says it is a senior advocacy organization. Send your questions to: ssadvisor@amacfoundation.org.
Author’s note: This article is intended for information purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association (NSSA). The NSSA and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity.
State pension fund generated 6 percent return in its latest fiscal quarter
ALBANY — The New York State Common Retirement Fund produced an estimated return of 6.18 percent in the third quarter of the current fiscal year — the three-month period ending Dec. 31, 2023. That’s according to New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, who also noted that the fund ended the quarter with an estimated value
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ALBANY — The New York State Common Retirement Fund produced an estimated return of 6.18 percent in the third quarter of the current fiscal year — the three-month period ending Dec. 31, 2023.
That’s according to New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, who also noted that the fund ended the quarter with an estimated value of $259.9 billion.
“The markets have seen an improvement over the past quarter, but some volatility remains,” DiNapoli said in a release.
The fund’s value reflects retirement and death benefits of $4.2 billion paid out during the latest quarter. Its audited value was $248.5 billion as of March 31, 2023, the end of last state fiscal year.
As of Dec. 31, the fund had 41.84 percent of its assets invested in publicly traded equities. The remaining fund assets by allocation are invested in cash, bonds, and mortgages (22.62 percent), private equity (14.75 percent), real estate and real assets (13.30 percent) and credit, absolute return strategies, and opportunistic alternatives (7.49 percent).
The fund’s long-term expected rate of return is 5.9 percent, the comptroller said.
The New York State Common Retirement Fund is one of the largest public pension funds in the U.S. It holds and invests the assets of the New York State and Local Retirement System on behalf of more than 1 million state-government and local-government employees and retirees and their beneficiaries.
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